Desktop Upgrade Planning: Start With the Bottleneck, Not the Part
Desktop upgrades are most useful when they solve a real bottleneck. Buying a new graphics card will not fix a failing SSD. Adding RAM will not solve overheating. Replacing a power supply may be unnecessary if the actual problem is unstable memory settings.
Start with the workload. Gaming, office work, design, video editing and accounting all stress different parts. Then check the current system: CPU, memory, storage, graphics card, power supply, cooling and motherboard support.
Compatibility saves trouble
Parts need to fit physically and electrically. A GPU may be too long for the case. A motherboard may not support a chosen CPU. A power supply may lack the right connectors. Storage slots may already be used.
Cooling should be part of the plan. More powerful parts can create more heat, and heat can reduce performance if airflow is poor.
When repair comes first
If the PC is crashing, slow or overheating, diagnose that before upgrading. Upgrades installed on an unstable system can hide the fault or create new ones.
AEPC / AKL East PC can help Auckland customers plan practical desktop upgrades and repairs. Bring the system specs or the tower for assessment.